ID: Q106164
The information in this article applies to:
- Standard and Professional Editions of Microsoft Visual Basic for
Windows, version 3.0
Text on controls and labels may have a different size or appearance at run time depending on the video device and driver. For example, many video drivers have a large-fonts option and a small-fonts option. This article describes how to adjust text at run-time automatically to fit the design- time label size, independent of the video driver.
Predicting how fonts will appear on different display devices is not easy. However, you can calibrate the appropriate FontSize to use at run time by using the following example. This example adjusts the form's FontSize so that a particular label caption fits best inside its Width. The label's Width can be set at design time to adjust how big the fonts ought to appear at run time. This example assumes a True Type FontName setting, which can be set to almost any size needed.
1. Start Visual Basic, and begin a new project.
2. Draw a label on a form.
3. Add the following code to the form's Load event:
Sub Form_Load ()
' This procedure determines the appropriate FontSize to display
' text in a label that was sized at design time.
Const SMALLESTFONTSIZE = 3 'Enter smallest available font size
' 1. Assign the FontName properties of the label to the Form:
' use Me (a reserved word describing the current form) instead of
' the name of the label control because you are comparing sizes
' using the TextWidth property. TextWidth returns the width as if
' it was printed directly on an object (the form). The TextWidth
' property does not apply to controls.
Me.FontName = Label1.FontName
Me.FontSize = Label1.FontSize
' 2. Increase FontSize until Caption is too wide too fit in label:
i = Me.FontSize
Do Until Me.TextWidth(Label1.Caption) >= Label1.Width
i = i + 1
Me.FontSize = i
'Debug.Print Me.FontSize
Loop
' 3. Decrease FontSize until Caption fits width-wise in label.
' NOTE: If the fontsize becomes less than SMALLESTFONTSIZE below,
' the Caption is too big for the current label size, even with
' the smallest available fontsize.
i = Me.FontSize
Do Until Me.TextWidth(Label1.Caption) <= Label1.Width
i = i - 1
If i < SMALLESTFONTSIZE Then
MsgBox "Caption width truncated to fit label - smallest font."
Exit Sub
End If
Me.FontSize = i
'Debug.Print "width:" & i; Me.FontSize
Loop
' 4. Decrease FontSize until Caption fits height-wise in label:
i = Me.FontSize
Do Until Me.TextHeight(Label1.Caption) <= Label1.Height
i = i - 1
If i < SMALLESTFONTSIZE Then
MsgBox "Caption height truncated to fit label - smallest font."
Exit Sub
End If
Me.FontSize = i
'Debug.Print "height" & i; Me.FontSize
Loop
' 5. Assign Font properties from the Form back to the label:
Label1.FontName = Me.FontName
Label1.FontSize = Me.FontSize
End Sub
If you need several different font sizes, set up a label to calibrate each
font size needed. The labels used to make this adjustment do not have to be
visible. Optionally, you can set the Visible property to False.
You can also have the program size label controls depending on the Screen.Height and Screen.Width properties at run time. Once you determine the correct size of the label, size the text inside the label.
You can call Windows API functions to obtain the enumerated FontSize list. This is useful to know for fixed, non-TrueType fonts. Visual Basic also offers font properties (Fonts, FontName, FontSize, and FontCount) to determine font information.
The enumerated FontSize list for non-TrueType fonts may vary from one screen resolution to another. This can happen because the number of logical pixels per inch can vary between resolutions. This means that the number of points per pixel can also vary. The point size of a font is adjusted to the nearest pixel.
The point size on a screen is based on logical inches. Logical inches are somewhat arbitrary because Windows has no way of really knowing how big a pixel is on your screen. For example, you could be hooked up to a projection TV or a tiny monitor. Usually the logical inch is overly large; tiny text is often difficult to read on a video display.
Because the point size is based on the logical pixels per inch of a device, not all point sizes can be represented. For example, on a standard VGA, Windows will tell you that the device has 96 pixels per logical inch (according to the Windows API GetDeviceCaps(hDC, LOGPIXELSY) function). A 96-pixel tall glyph is 72 points because each point is about 1/72 of an inch. This means each pixel is 72/96 point or 0.75 point per pixel. The system could theoretically represent fonts of the following heights:
1 pixel = 0.75 point
2 pixels = 1.50 point
3 pixels = 2.25 point
4 pixels = 3.00 point
Rounding errors are unavoidable in this scheme. Even if the device
displayed exactly 96 dots per inch (DPI), it could not represent a
font that was exactly 2 points. The closest it could come would be
2.25 points. Usually, this small difference is not noticeable. However,
if two screen drivers have different logical pixels-per-inch, you
might see different point sizes in the enumerated list in Windows.
Keywords : kbprg PrgCtrlsStd vbwin
Version : WINDOWS:3.00
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbhowto
Last Reviewed: September 30, 1997